does resurrection ground works
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title: Does resurrection doctrine give us unique reasons to work for justice?
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description: >-
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Tom Wright claims that the only Christian grounds for striving for justice now
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is in resurrection doctrine. I'm not convinced.
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pubDate: 2025-05-04
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---
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I've been reading Tom Wright's _Surprised By Hope_, defending his orthodox view
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on resurrection. One of his key claims is that only by accepting the orthodox
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position on resurrection can Christians justify striving for justice on earth.
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To argue this, he needs to first show that resurrection doctrine does justify
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striving for justice on earth, and secondly that the available alternatives fail
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to do so. Firstly, the positive argument.
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## Does resurrection give us reasons to work for justice?
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Wright's argument depends on his view on what God's ultimate future will look
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like: the present creation will not be abandoned, destroyed, or replaced, but
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physically transformed into the new creation.
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He argues that our work now has value, because, at the time when God transforms
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the old world into the new, he will incorporate the outcomes of our good works
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into the new creation, like an architect incorporating the works of many
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stonemasons into a great cathedral.
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He argues this on the basis of 1 Cor 15. I found it a struggle to find a good
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justification for Wright's view in chapter 15 alone, but I did find some crucial
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context in chapter 3, just before he begins the first of his many exhortations
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to the Corinthians. It would be best to read the whole chapter, but here is
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verses 11-15:
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> For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is
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> Jesus Christ. If anyone builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly
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> stones, wood, hay or straw, their work will be shown for what it is, because
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> the Day will bring it to light. It will be revealed with fire, and the fire
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> will test the quality of each person’s work. If what has been built survives,
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> the builder will receive a reward. If it is burned up, the builder will suffer
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> loss but yet will be saved—even though only as one escaping through the
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> flames.
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This at least implies that the outcome of all our work will persist at least
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until the time of judgement, when it will undergo testing, and those that pass
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the test will enjoy a reward. You could read this as being like a quality check,
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with God dishing out benefits to those that pass his assessment. But you could
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read it in another way, more favourable to Wright. The works will be proven, and
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the ones that withstand the process will themselves generate a benefit. You
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could think of it like baking: when you put a cake in the oven, you prove
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whether or not you got the recipe right; if not, it goes in the bin, and if you
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did get it right, you get to enjoy the cake. So I agree that 1 Cor provides a
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reason to think that the outcome of our works will somehow persist until the
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time of judgement.
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However, Wright doesn't just think that our works will persist until the time of
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judgement, he also believes that they will at that time be transformed and then
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incorporated into the new creation. 1 Cor doesn't directly justify this view. It
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is, at least, coherent. Baking a cake in the oven transforms the dough.
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So it seems reasonable to me to use 1 Cor to justify Wright's view that our
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works will be transformed into the new Creation. However, that's before
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considering any counter-arguments, and I have two which concern me.
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One is that, as Ecclesiastes points out, the profits of our work will be laid to
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waste by time. We don't know when God is going to bring about the new creation.
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It could be tomorrow, and we should be behaving today in light of that
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possibility - but of all the available possibilities, most of them are in the
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distant future, so we should expect on average that there will be a long
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interval between my deeds today and the judgement of them. Since time lays waste
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to all our endeavours, we should expect that the profits of our work will have
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vanished long before the judgement. Therefore, it would be unreasonable to work
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for justice in the hope that our work will persist until the time of judgement
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in order to be incorporated into the new creation, as Wright argues we should
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do.
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This first problem is probably the most important, but it's vulnerable to some
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counter-arguments, which rather miss the point. So I'm going to move on to my
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second problem, which is more niche, but which I think holds stronger against
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counter-arguments.
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In 1845, the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror left Britain on an expedition to explore
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the Northwest Passage. In July 1845, they were spotted by whalers in Baffin Bay.
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None of the sailors were ever seen alive again by Europeans. Both ships became
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locked into ice in September 1846, and probably never sailed again. In April
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1848, the remaining crew began a desperate 250-mile march to the nearest
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European outpost. It is almost certain that all of them died.
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Now, suppose that one of those sailors, between 1846 and 1848, did something
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good. Maybe a major act of heroism, or maybe a small, kind word. I think it's
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reasonable to suppose that someone, at some time, did something good.
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All the profits of that good act have now completely perished. They are not
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recorded in the small records the sailors left behind. None of the sailors who
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benefited lived to pass on the benefits. None survived to pass on the light of
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justice to the next generation.
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At the time of judgement, then, there will be no remnant of this good act for
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God to test, transform and incorporate into his new creation.
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Does this mean that the good act was wasted? Was it only worth a shot just in
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case, despite all the odds, the sailors made it home again?
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I think this is a cruel conclusion: but it seems to be where Wright must go.
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If it is implausible that the profits of all our good works will make it through
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to the time of judgement, then we have to accept that 1 Cor 3 is true only in
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some metaphorical sense, not that our works will literally persist in order to
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be tested. And if that is true, then the premise of Wright's argument is false:
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our work will not necessarily be incorporated into the new creation, so that
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cannot generate reasons for working for justice now.
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I am not convinced by Wright's positive argument. I would like to consider
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alternative interpretations of 1 Cor. This is what Wright goes on to do.
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## Do alternative views give us reason to work for justice?
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The first view which Wright considers is the gnostic view that resurrection is
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just an afterlife in heaven. He argues that this does not generate reasons for
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working for justice now, but his argument is really the converse of the argument
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in favour of his own view, which I've already considered above, so I'll move on.
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The other alternative Wright considers is what he calls 'evolutionary optimism'.
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You might also call this 'progressivism'. By this he means the view that the new
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creation will be made the Church gradually building upon its own works,
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generation after generation, approaching and eventually achieving God's perfect
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standard by its works. This is the Victorian optimism which is still a powerful
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force in our politics: that history is building upon itself, and progressing
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from barbarism to civilisation, from brutishness to beauty, from tragedy to
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justice.
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He argues that this view, too, does not give us reasons to work for justice now.
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His argument is intriguing: if our work for justice is condemned to only ever be
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partially successful, then we have no reason to do it. In fact, contra the
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evolutionary optimist, no amount of hard work on our part will ever achieve
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perfect justice, and therefore if bringing in the new creation is all about our
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works, we have no reason to strive for justice.
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I'm intrigued by the premise that if we know that our work will at best be
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partially successful, then we have no reason to do it.
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This isn't how we ordinarily think: typically, if I think attempting to go to
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the gym twice a week is going to be partially successful, I would say that this
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generates a reason for me to go to the gym.
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But I sense there may be an interesting meta-ethical thesis here: perhaps what
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we ordinarily call 'partial success' is in fact a mistake, papering over what is
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in fact simply a failure.
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There's an obvious error theory: we had to create the concept of the 'partial
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success' in order to generate reasons in the world as it appears, the world as
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described in Ecclesiastes as 'vanity', where the best-laid plans of mice and men
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gang aft agley, and all our works crumble into the dust eventually. In order to
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think we had reasons at all, we needed to invent the concept of the 'partial
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success'.
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But is there a good argument for the view that there is no such thing as a
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partial success?
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In 1915, the HMS Endurance, under the command of Captain Ernest Shackleton,
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became stuck fast in Antarctic pack ice in the Weddell Sea. In the face of
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extraordinary challenges, Shackleton vowed to bring all his sailors back to the
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UK alive: and in one of the most famous exploits of Antarctic exploration, he
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succeeded.
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It would have been wrong, had Shackleton vowed only to bring back _most_ of his
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sailors. We know that he would have been able to bring _all_ of them back,
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because he in fact did so. To strive for less would have been negligent.
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This is to illustrate a general principle: we ought to strive for the best that
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we are able.
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Grant that necessarily, no particular justice is inevitable. It follows that
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necessarily, it is possible to prevent all injustice. Therefore, perfect justice
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is achievable.
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And yet we _know_ that we will not achieve perfect justice. It's way too hard.
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It does seem that I've proven a contradiction: both that perfect justice is
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possible and that it is impossible. I expect these are two different kinds of
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modality. I'm not too bothered to carefully distinguish them, as long we agree
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that these two things can both be true in some sense. By analogy, consider that,
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if you can run a mile in so many seconds, you can run it in a second less; that,
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by sorites, it follows that you can run a mile in a minute; and that you
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obviously cannot run a mile in a minute: it is too hard. Perfect justice is
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perhaps a little like this: it is achievable in the sense that it is physically
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possible for us to achieve it, but unachievable in the sense that it's way too
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hard.
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So, since perfect justice is in some sense achievable, it follows that we ought
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to strive for it. But since we know we will not achieve perfect justice, it
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follows that we cannot have a reason to strive for it: we cannot genuinely
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strive for what we know we cannot do. Therefore, if you reject that God will
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work to transform our world of vanity into something fundamentally different
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where perfect justice is not only genuinely achievable but actually realised,
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then you will be stuck in this hopeless tension, where you both must bring about
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perfect justice, and have no reason to do it, because you have no hope of
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success.
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Where from here? I would really like to find alternative interpretations of 1 Cor,
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and weigh them up against Wright's interpretation. It may be that, whatever the
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counter-arguments, Wright's view is the strongest available. It may not.
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